UCR is annual, not one-time. Unified Carrier Registration is a per-registration-year obligation: every interstate motor carrier, broker, freight forwarder, and leasing company must register with its base state and pay the fee everyyear. There is no lifetime UCR, no multi-year filing, and no “set it and forget it” option built into the program itself — the registration year runs on the calendar year, and a paid 2025 does nothing for 2026. The federal regulation that sets the fee, 49 CFR §367.50, is titled for “Registration Years Beginning in 2025 and Each Subsequent Registration Year Thereafter” — the per-year structure is baked into the rule's own name.
Is UCR a One-Time Fee or Do You Pay Every Year?
Every year. The UCR Plan is explicit that every entity subject to UCR “is required to register annually with its base state and pay an annual fee.” The fee schedule in 49 CFR §367.50 is a per-registration-year table, not a one-time charge — the same bracket fee comes due again at the start of each new year. If anyone tells you UCR is a one-and-done payment, they are describing a filing that does not exist.
The confusion usually comes from comparing UCR to one-time FMCSA filings. Your USDOT number is issued once. A BOC-3 process-agent designation generally stays on file until you change agents. UCR is different: it is a recurring annual fee that sits on top of those one-time registrations. For the full program-by-program breakdown, see what UCR registration actually is.
Does UCR Expire? When Your Registration Lapses
UCR doesn't “expire” on a rolling 12-month clock from your filing date — it is tied to the calendar registration year. Whatever year you paid for ends on December 31, and a new year's registration becomes enforceable on January 1. The UCR Plan's guidance is that an operation must complete its UCR registration and pay its fee before January 1 of the registration year to keep operating legally; after that date the fee is still owed and the carrier is exposed to state enforcement.
Practically, that means your “current” UCR lapses the instant the calendar turns. A registration that was perfectly valid on December 31 is no longer valid on January 1 unless you have filed for the new year. There is also no grace period written into the program — the deadline and the enforcement start are the same moment. The timing within a single year is covered in depth in when is UCR due.
If I File Mid-Year, Is the Fee Smaller?
No. UCR is not prorated. The fee table in 49 CFR §367.50 sets a single flat annual amount per fleet-size bracket, with no partial-year discount for filing in June instead of October. A carrier that registers late pays the same bracket fee as a carrier that registered on day one — and absorbs whatever enforcement exposure built up in the gap. Filing late stops the bleeding from the filing date forward; it does not shrink the bill or erase a citation you already caught.
The bracket fee is keyed to fleet size, not to timing. For the 2026 registration year, the federal fee runs from $46 for the smallest bracket (0–2 vehicles) up to $44,836 for the largest (1,001+ vehicles), per the schedule published by the UCR Plan:
| Bracket | Vehicles | 2026 federal fee (per year) |
|---|---|---|
| B1 | 0–2 | $46 |
| B2 | 3–5 | $138 |
| B3 | 6–20 | $276 |
| B4 | 21–100 | $963 |
| B5 | 101–1,000 | $4,592 |
| B6 | 1,001+ | $44,836 |
Those are the government fees, payable again each registration year. How the count that puts you in a bracket is calculated is walked through in UCR tiers and fees and UCR tier by fleet size.
How Often Do You Renew UCR?
Once a year, indefinitely, for as long as you hold active interstate FMCSA authority. There is no point at which the obligation stops recurring — a ten-year-old fleet renews UCR exactly as often as a brand-new one. The renewal window for the upcoming year typically opens October 1, and the new registration is enforceable January 1, so the comfortable habit is to file in October or November every year. Letting it slip is the single most common UCR mistake; the rest are catalogued in the common UCR mistakes guide.
Because the obligation never goes away, the real question isn't whetheryou renew — it's how to make sure a renewal year never slips past you.
What Is UCR Auto-Renew and How Does It Work?
Because UCR recurs every year, an auto-renew option exists to take the annual deadline off your plate. The UCR Plan runs its own Auto-Renewal program that automatically renews a registrant's UCR at the opening of each new registration year, and third-party filers offer the same convenience on top of the federal fee.
FastUCR is a third-party filing service (not a government agency), and our pricing is built around the fact that the obligation recurs. For the smallest bracket (0–2vehicles — which also covers brokers, forwarders, and leasing companies with no trucks), a one-time filing is $80 ($46 federal + $34 service), while the $70/year auto-renewoption carries a $10/year renewal discount and files you automatically each year so a January 1 lapse never sneaks up. You stay in control — auto-renew can be cancelled — but the default becomes “always current” instead of “hope I remembered.” You can also file at the official National UCR Registration System yourself and pay only the federal fee; the trade-off is that you own the renewal reminder every year.
Never miss a UCR year again
File this year in minutes — or switch on $70/year auto-renew and let the January 1 deadline take care of itself.
File UCR NowBottom line:UCR is an annual fee, never a one-time one. It is tied to the calendar year, lapses every December 31, becomes enforceable again each January 1, and is not prorated for late filers. You renew it every year for as long as you run interstate — so the smart move is either a standing October reminder or an auto-renew that handles the recurrence for you.